16.01 / 16.02 / 16.03 / 16.04 Unified Engineering I, II, III, & IV

As taught in: Fall 2005 - Spring 2006

An abstracted aircraft wing with illustrated systems.
An abstracted aircraft wing, illustrating the connections between the disciplines of Unified Engineering. (Image by MIT OpenCourseWare.)

Course Features

Course Highlights

This course features materials from Unified Engineering which comprise more than four times the volume of a typical one-semester MIT course. The seven disciplines covered in this site, along with the course's organization and pedagogy, are explained in the detailed syllabus. This course also features videos, including a course introduction, lecture samples, and a documentary of the Spring semester project. Samples of active learning techniques employed by the course faculty are also included.

Course Description

The basic objective of Unified Engineering is to give a solid understanding of the fundamental disciplines of aerospace engineering, as well as their interrelationships and applications. These disciplines are Materials and Structures (M); Computers and Programming (C); Fluid Mechanics (F); Thermodynamics (T); Propulsion (P); and Signals and Systems (S). In choosing to teach these subjects in a unified manner, the instructors seek to explain the common intellectual threads in these disciplines, as well as their combined application to solve engineering Systems Problems (SP). Throughout the year, the instructors emphasize the connections among the disciplines.

Instructors

Prof. Jennifer Craig

Prof. Mark Drela

Prof. Steven Hall

Prof. Paul Lagace

Prof. Ingrid Kristina Lundqvist

Prof. Raul Radovitzky

Prof. Ian Waitz

Col. Peter Young

Prof. Gustaf Naeser

Prof. Heidi Perry

Technical Requirements

Special software is required to use some of the files in this course: .xls, .dat, .exe, .zip, .rm.


*Some translations represent previous versions of courses.

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